Im using a carbide (i believe) bit on my lathe.
I'm facing the tip by putting it in the lathe and facing it with the bit I use to face the ferule
Yes I have checked to make sure they are flat.
Yes I score the back.
Unless you're cutting your phenolic tip from a rod stock, it should never be faced in the lathe. Use the bed of your lathe, some 180-220 grit sandpaper to scuff and 'flatten' the back of the tip.
Ok so if I'm understanding what your saying correctly, you basically do this to the tip:
|____........._____|
.........|........|.........
(ignore the periods, I had to put them in for spacing)
then drill down into the ferule to seat it in, is that correct?
I'm guessing if you are doing that you are starting with a tip that is about a half inch thick or so, then taking a quarter inch at the base for your stem, and the other quarter inch is the actual tip.
if that's not what your are saying could you please clarify so I can understand better.
Although if that is not what you are saying that actually isn't a bad idea either.
It was more than that. The top ~1/4" of the ferrule, which would constitute a normal capped ferrule, was drilled and tapped. The tenon on the back side of the tip was threaded. The tipped screwed securely into the ferrule. No chance for the tip to pop off then.
Which glue did you switch to?
It's not the switching glue, it's the ferrule. Thermoform plastics when used as break ferrules are inherently weak/soft. So when you know that, unless special precautions are taken, the tip, even a normal playing tip, can come flying off under a hard stroke. But this is more or less when the ferrule is just sleeved over and not capped.
Both are tips. the ferule material is usually some sort of white material. depends on the stick. And I know it's not the material because I have had break cues come in where the tip was attached already but the customer wanted a different tip. So I know the ferule was fine.
Because there are times when you either can't change the ferule or the customer does not want you to change the ferule.
I have only run into this a couple times but once is enough for me to want to learn to do it right.
Right now I have a predator bk2 shaft where the customer wants just a tip put on. (an ice breaker to be specific) and he wants the original ferule intact. that being the case, I can't just do a one piece. and their is a guy that does repairs about a half hour from me and I am tired of losing business to him because his tips aren't falling off. So if his aren't falling off, there has to be some way for mine to also not fall of. hence me asking here.
90 percent of the break and jump cues that come from factory, the tips stay on for the life of the cue. So they must be doing something I'm not. I want to learn what they are doing so I can do it. Simple as that.
First off, 90% of the break cues from the factory use lesser grade phenolics/procedures. I just replaced a one piece tip/ferrule on a cue because the top literally collapsed inward. Yes there was a gap between the end of the tenon and the tip area. And again, like I said on the first page, if the ferrule material wasn't designed for breaking in mind, it's a weak material to begin with and nothing you do can help keep a tip that is harder than the ferrule attached to it. The shear forces and weakness of the ferrule are fighting each other.
If you're able to get ribbons of material off the ferrule, it's too soft for a break ferrule.
After you've made entirely sure that both faces are mating up flat and no rocking is in place, score both the end of the ferrule and the backside of the tip a razor blade and hit them with sandpaper. Using either an air hose/can and not your breath, blow off both faces. Double check the fit. Apply enough
Loctite Super Glue Ultra Gel Control to the backside of the tip, and smear it all over. Quickly press into place and quickly clean up the squeezed out glue. Let set 10 minutes. Trim and use. If it still falls off, video tape your entire process for us to see.
In the case of the BK2, do not remove the pad underneath the tip.